Many consider 1982 to be one of the greatest years in movie history. With titles like E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, Blade Runner, The Thing, Poltergeist, Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, and many other influential, revolutionary, unforgettable movies, it’s a year that will always be remembered as a landmark in pop culture history. And now 30 years later we have a year that could very well end up being remembered the same way.

Despite a splendid cast, a wild premise, and a relatively low budget, Seven Psychopaths didn’t make a large impression at the box office during its theatrical run, pulling in a little under $15 million. If you missed it in theaters, you’ll be able to catch the twisted comedy when it hits Blu-ray and DVD on January 29.

After winning an Academy Award for his short film Six Shooter, playwright Martin McDonagh made his move to the world of features with the movie In Bruges. While the title failed to get any real traction domestically at the time of its theatrical release, it garnered a great deal of critical praise, earned a Best Original Screenplay Academy Award nomination, won Colin Farrell a Golden Globe and has since taken on a cult following.

Already we've seen hints of the film's wild side with its green band and red band trailers, as well as a PSA from Woody Harrelson's pet-loving but bloodthirsty gangster Charlie Costello. Now, we've got the feature's most bizarre promo to date, their trailer recreated with cats….in wigs. Prepare to be stunned by the cussing and killing Seven PsychoCATS.

Seven Psychopaths tells the story of Marty (Colin Farrell) and his two friends, Billy (Sam Rockwell) and Hans (Christopher Walken) who make money by kidnapping dogs and then returning them for the reward money. While this racket has been working well, Billy and Hans slip up when they accidentally kidnap the shi-tzu of a local, angry gangster named Charlie Costello (Woody Harrelson).

Those who have been following the film's development through production may remember a time last year when the project hit a speed bump in the casting department. It had initially been reported that Mickey Rourke had signed on to play the movie's antagonist, a dog-loving, violent gangster named Charlie Costello, but that story fell apart in November when Rourke had a few choice words for McDonagh. "The director was a jerkoff," Rourke said when asked about the project.

The hotly anticipated feature's promo posters and trailers counted down psychopaths one through seven while laying out the comedy's kooky premise and unhinged sense of humor. Now, we've got two clips that give us more insight into the four spotlighted above

In the 34 years that the Toronto International Film Festival has handed out an audience award, 10 of those winners have gone on to be nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars-- and 4 have won the top prize. Two of those big winners, The King's Speech and Slumdog Millionaire, have won in the last 5 years

Martin McDonagh's In Bruges is not what you would call a "child-friendly movie" - in fact, the entire story begins because one of the main characters shoots a young boy in the face. It has plenty of drugs, sex, cursing, violence, nudity and bad people doing bad things to other bad people, and McDonagh's next film, Seven Psychopaths, doesn't look like its going to be a movie for the kiddies either.

Beyond being a pretty excellent title that evokes a sense of grand storytelling and frenzy, the name promised at least seven new additions to McDonagh's catalogue of often violent but always humorous characters. And with CBS Film's release of individual character posters, you don't need to wait for the film to hit theaters to get to know these psychos.

In Bruges star Colin Farrell reteams with McDonagh to play Billy's best friend Marty, a screenwriter who gets caught in the cross hairs of his pal's dangerous scheme. Tom Waits, Quantum of Solace's Olga Kurylenko, Abbie Cornish and Precious's Gabourey Sidibe also co-star, and each get some screentime below in Seven Psychopaths' first trailer, which helpfully counts down its titular lunatics.

We've already seen some big movies get pushed far back into the release schedule so far in 2012. At the start of the year it was reported that Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters, a new action film starring Jeremy Renner and Gemma Arterton, was moved from March 2, 2012 to January 11, 2013. We then saw another major shift at the start of the summer when it was announced that G.I. Joe: Retaliation...

Farrell is back on board and co-stars with Christopher Walken and Sam Rockwell—who shared the stage in the 2010 Broadway production of The Behanding in Spokane. He plays a struggling screenwriter, while they portray the oddball friends who get him into trouble with a ruthless gangster (Woody Harrelson) by kidnapping the thug's beloved Shih Tzu.

Greetings from Las Vegas, Cinema Blend fans! I have arrived in the legendary city of sin for this year's CinemaCon, the annual event where the biggest names and studios in Hollywood travel out to the desert to present footage from their biggest upcoming films. I'll be here all week to report on all of the insanely cool stuff that I get to see, and while the convention doesn't actually start until tomorrow, I already have a lot of awesome things to show you

Seven Psychopaths, the sophomore writing/directing effort from In Bruges filmmaker Martin McDonagh, has been given a November 11, 2012 date. This means that the movie will be going up against the remake of Red Dawn, Disney's Wreck-It Ralph and the Seth Rogen-Barbra Streisand comedy The Guilt Trip.

Farrell is the central character of the film, a screenwriter working on a script called Seven Psychopaths-- it's no coincidence that he, like the writer-director, is also named Martin-- and trying to find the personalities to flesh out the story. That becomes less of a problem when he gets wrapped up in Rockwell's scheme to kidnap the dogs belonging to rich people

Even though it was his directorial debut, Martin McDonagh managed to assemble one hell of a cast for when he made In Bruges. Bringing together Colin Farrell, Brendan Gleeson and Ralph Fiennes, the movie was not only brilliantly written, but featured some outstanding performances. But McDonagh is planning to go even bigger for his sophomore effort, Seven Psychopaths.

Last month we reported that Rourke had turned down a role in The Expendables 2 in order to take part in Psychopaths, which also includes Colin Farrell, Christopher Walken and Sam Rockwell in the cast. It's hard to know exactly what happened to cause that bad blood between Rourke and McDonagh

For one Expendables cast member, that title has proved all too accurate when it comes to the sequel. Mickey Rourke, who played an old friend and former teammate of Sylvester Stallone's Barney Ross in the 2010 action hit, will not be returning for the 2012 sequel.

This story makes me 40 different varieties of happy. In Bruges proved that McDonagh knows how to make a pitch-perfect dark comedy and this film seems perfectly in line with that. It's a shame that it seems as though Brendan Gleeson won't be returning, but it's really hard to complain about the cast that has been assembled here.

The story sounds even more wackadoo than a few hitmen stuck in Belgium. Farrell plays a screenwriter working on a script with the same name as the film's title; for some reason he agrees to help his friends (Rockwell and Walken) kidnap a dog, and things get even more complicated when a gangster